Japan Stablecoin Issuers Could Fill Central Bank’s Bond-buying Gap:...

Japan Stablecoin Issuers Could Fill Central Bank’s Bond-buying Gap:...

Japan’s first yen stablecoin issuer, JPYC, said growing demand could make stablecoin reserves a new force in the country’s bond market.

Japan’s first domestic stablecoin issuer said digital asset companies may soon become significant players in the country’s sovereign debt market, potentially reshaping monetary policy.

JPYC, the Tokyo-based company behind Japan’s first yen-pegged stablecoin, said issuers may evolve into major buyers of Japanese government bonds (JGBs) as their reserves increase.

In comments reported by Reuters, JPYC founder and CEO Noritaka Okabe said stablecoin reserves could fill the gap left by the Bank of Japan (BOJ) as it slows its bond purchases.

The Tokyo-based startup started issuing its yen-backed token, also dubbed JPYC, on Oct. 27, under the country’s revised Payment Services Act, its first legal framework for stablecoins. The company has issued about $930,000 worth of tokens to date and aims to reach a circulation of $66 billion within the next three years.

The token is backed by a combination of bank deposits and JGBs and is fully convertible to yen. It’s also designed to move seamlessly across blockchain rails.

Okabe said JPYC plans to invest 80% of its issuance proceeds in JGBs and keep the remaining 20% in bank savings, initially focusing on short-term securities. He added that the company may consider longer-term JGBs in the future as demand grows and the yields remain attractive.

This type of allocation could give stablecoin issuers a significant role in Japan’s debt market, where the BOJ still holds about half of the $7 trillion JGB market. As the central bank slows bond purchases, new buyers need to absorb the issuance.

Because of this, Okabe floated the idea that stablecoin reserves could naturally fill part of the vacuum, linking blockchain adoption to fiscal financing.

“The volumes of JGBs stablecoin issuers buy will be swayed by the balance of supply and demand for stablecoins,” he said, noting that this trend “will happen around the world” and that Japan will not be an exception.

Source: CoinTelegraph